Inteins are self-catalytic protein splicing elements. InBase (http://www.neb.com/neb/inteins.html), the Intein Database and Registry, is a curated compilation of published and unpublished information about protein splicing. It presents general information as well as detailed data for each intein, including tabulated comparisons and a comprehensive bibliography. An intein-specific BLAST server is now available to assist in identifying new inteins.
Protein splicing results in the expression of two mature proteins from a single gene. After synthesis of a precursor protein, an internal segment (the intein) is excised and the external domains are joined together. A self‐catalyzed mechanism for this cleavage‐ligation reaction is presented, based on mutagenesis data and analysis of splicing intermediates. Mutations were used to block various steps in the protein splicing pathway, allowing each isolated step to be studied independently. A linear ester intermediate was identified and functional roles for the four conserved splice junction residues were determined. Understanding the mechanism of protein splicing provides a basis for protein engineering studies. For example, inteins can be constructed which fail to splice, but instead cleave the peptide bond at a chosen splice junction.
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